Tech Tuesday: Annotations in Scrivener

Tech Tuesday: Annotations in Scrivener

Do you ever wish you could scribble on your manuscript? Maybe you want to make notes about a particular paragraph you're struggling with, or mark a place that requires further research.

You guessed it. Scrivener has a function for that. It's called Annotations.

Add an Annotation

To activate the Annotation feature:

Choose Format—>Inline Annotation.

Type in your note or reminder. Make sure to set your spacing as if the annotation wasn't there, otherwise it'll be off when you print/export your manuscript.

Click outside of annotation, or go to Format—>Inline Annotation to turn it off (or, even easier, use Shift+Cmd+A for Mac, Ctrl+Shift+A for Windows).

Change the Color

If the glaring red color is too distracting, you can change it.

Mac

All future annotations will be in the new color, but previously created annotations are not affected.

Select the annotation text.

From the Format bar, choose the desired text color (or go to Format—>Font—>Show Colors and select a color).

Windows

All current and future annotations will have the new color.

Go to Tools—>Options—>Appearance.

In the Colors section, click the expansion arrow next to Editor (or double-click Editor) and select Annotation Text in the list.

Click the color box to the right and select the desired annotation color.

Click OK to apply your changes and close the Options window.

Find Your Annotations

Here's the most important part of all. After you've gone through your manuscript and you want to find the notes you made to yourself, there's an easy search.

Go to Edit—>Find—>Find by Formatting.

When the box opens, choose Inline Annotations.

To search for the next one, click Next.

If you code your Annotations (for revisions, research, etc.), you can search for only those annotations relating to what you're ready to work on. How cool is that?

In the Containing Text: box, enter the search string you want to look for.

Click Next. Scrivener will return the next annotation that meets your search criteria.

Dealing with Annotations During Compile

When you're ready to export/print your manuscript, you have a couple of options. In Compile Manuscript, under the Text Options tab, you can choose to Remove Annotations or Export Annotations as RTF.

The first option strips them out of your MS. This is where the spacing becomes important. The second option embeds the annotations in your MS (much as they look on your screen), in red and flanked by square brackets.

For all you contest judges, I could see importing the electronic entry into Scrivener, making your comments through annotations, and then exporting it with the Export Annotations as RTF feature selected. This gives you the commenting ease of Word's Track Changes function, but provides a contest-friendly RTF output.

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35 Comments

This stuff is too technical for me. But I will say I did use annotations for the first time on my youtube video and it’s a cool feature. I can see how it could help out writers. It’s like writing notes on the computer screen. What’s next? A sandwich with 2 pieces of chicken and no bread???

Okay–seriously needed to know this when I imported my doc over from Word back into a new S doc. AACK. But this is helpful for all future issues. Oh, and I have a question about the FIND feature. How come when I do a find in the doc–for something I KNOW is in the doc (like my @@), the @@ is NOT found? But then I can do a search in the general search button and the @@ will show up, but as soon as I fix one @@ issue, the other highlighted @@s are no longer highlighted.

Glad you found it helpful, Brenda. I keep finding new features the more I use the program. Tech Tuesday is my chance to share them with my Scrivener-loving friends. Let me know if there’s anything you’d like me to cover in the future.

Pandora

Hi,
I like the annotations feature and the coding idea is great, too. But I still have trouble with the annotations changing colour when I alter the formatting and can’t find a simple solution to this.

lozzer17: If you’ve imported them as web pages, then you can’t annotate or comment on them. If you were to copy/paste the contents of the page, then you could do it. An option for imported web pages is to use Document Notes, but that doesn’t give you location-specific note-taking capabilities, merely a spot for general notes about that page.

LindyK: Glad that feature is helpful to you. You can always convert your annotations into comments if you want them in the side bar instead. Annotations and comments are basically the same thing, but in different locations depending on how “in your face” you want them to be. If you’re looking for that navigation capability, comments might be a better option for you. Both can be included/excluded in your output, as desired. Good luck!

Hi Gwen! I know this is an older post, but would you elaborate a little more one what you mean by “Make sure to set your spacing as if the annotation wasn’t there…”? I believe this is going to be a very useful feature for me, but I want to make sure I don’t create a nightmare at compile-time.

No problem, Nat. The thing to keep in mind is that the annotation will be removed during compile (unless you choose not to), so I’ll give you an illustration using text in parentheses to stand in for an annotation.

If you type: He holstered his Beretta(or other)and faced her.
You’ll get this when you compile: He holstered his Berettaand faced her.

To avoid that, add a space on either side of the annotation, but not both sides.
For example: He holstered his Beretta (or other)and faced her.
Or: He holstered his Beretta(or other) and faced her.

You can also put space inside the annotations for easier reading.
Example: He holstered his Beretta( or other ) and faced her.

mr christer from Sweden

I think it would be quite handy to be able to hide the inline annotations from time to time. Because I like to “comment in the text”, but I don’t always want to see those comments.
Do you know if there is a way to toggle the visibility of inline annotations? Please note, I’m on the windows version.

Your site helps me out a lot, I really appreciate your skill level and your way of explaining 🙂

mr christer from Sweden: The ability to toggle annotation visibility would be handy, but unfortunately it’s not an option. I noticed on the forum that others have asked for it, but apparently when the folks at L&L asked Apple if there was a way to do it without breaking things, they said no.

The closest thing I can think of would be to convert your annotations to comments. That’s under Format>Convert>Inline Annotations to Inspector Comments. Instead of the notes being embedded right in the text, they’d be in comment boxes off to the side with only a linked word in the text. To view the note, you would click on the linked word to open the Comments pane.

If you changed your mind and wanted annotations back, you could go to Format>Convert>Inspector Comments to Inline Annotations. Wish I had a better option for you. Thanks!

mr christer from Sweden

I think that’s quite a good idea, as it would actually be like toggling 🙂
Of course it would “wipe out” the “original comments that should always be only comments” and make them part of this “toggle”, but…
Anyway, this is just a little thing, and you just showed a possible workaround.

In all, I must say that I’m very impressed by Scrivener. I have used it for a week, and one of the biggest challenges for me in a novel project is: where to put all ideas and associations that constantly come up in the creative process? And so that I can find them again…?
Well, in Scrivener we got: Scratch Pad for truly global things (scope: several projects), Project notes (with tabs!) and Document notes, the Research folder, all the “cards” about Character, Settings and such…
Plus inline annotations and comments – and then there are even more that I haven’t listed here.

So maybe – this time – I will actually finish a novel project. I have written plays for theatres, poetry, short stories… but in the back of my head have always been ringing: “write a novel too!”

Thanks again for your educational website 🙂
I might be back with more questions as the project (hopefully) moves along…

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Gwen Hernandez is the author of Scrivener For Dummies, the Men of Steele series of romantic suspense, and Productivity Tools For Writers. She provides Scrivener training through ScrivenerClasses.com, private instruction, and in-person workshops. Thanks for visiting!

Gwen Hernandez is the author of Scrivener For Dummies, romantic suspense (Men of Steele series), and Productivity Tools for Writers, and a contributor to Author In Progress. She teaches Scrivener to students all over the world through her online courses, private training, and in-person workshops.

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